Over the ages, people have been fascinated by flight. Early designers were inspired by the natural fluidity of bird flight to replicate nature and create vehicle designs that could lift humans above the constraints of the earth's surface. The fascination of humans with birds as the basis of flying is well depicted in both Leonard da Vinci’s (Italian artist, architect, scientist, and engineer) sketches and sayings.
“A bird is an instrument
working according to mathematical law, an instrument which is within the
capacity of man to reproduce with all its movements.”
Leonard da Vinci
Ornithopters
Ornithopters were the first
attempt by humans to fly. Being fascinated by birds and their flapping
wings, people fashioned artificial wings and flapped them with their arms. But
it was proved unsuccessful as flapping requires continuous and a lot of power.
Afterwards, mechanical mechanisms were used to flap the wings up and down. This
resulted in vehicles known as Ornithopters. The great Italian artist,
architect, scientist, and engineer Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) devoted much
of his time to flight. His manuscripts contained some 160 pages of descriptions
and sketches of flying machines.
Balloons
The balloon flight was pioneered by
two French brothers some 250 years after Leonardo’s work. They use the concept of
rising hot air to achieve flight. The first hot balloon was risen up to 305
meters (1000 ft.) on 25 April 1783. But as soon as the hot air
cooled down, balloons began to descend. Therefore, longer duration and high
altitude was the barrier to hot air balloon flight.
With the advancement in balloon
design, hot air was replaced by hydrogen. Being lighter than air, hydrogen
rises in ambient air. This allowed balloons to rise higher and the flight was
also independent of the temperature difference of hydrogen with ambient air.
Further, hydrogen balloons were equipped with sails and rudders
to achieve controlled flight. Professor Jacques Alexandre César Charles was the
first to successfully demonstrate a hydrogen balloon on 27 August 1783. Charles
and his assistant made a 43 km (27 mi) free flight from the garden of the
Tuileries, Paris, on 1 December 1783.
Dirigibles
Dirigibles (also called
zeppelins) were elongated bags filled with gas. They were the mean of
controlled and powered flight and thus fitted with engines, propellers and
rudders. The major challenge with dirigibles was to maintain their elongated
aerodynamic shape for efficient steering when bags were only partially filled with
gas. The first light and rigid-shaped dirigible flight were carried out by Luftschiff Zeppelin
(LZ-1) on 2 July 1900.
Gliders
Gliders were light aircraft equipped
with fixed wings to generate lift and were able to fly without the means
of the power plant. Glider configuration was initiated by Sir George Cayley in
1799. His aircraft configuration consisted of fixed wings, peddles, and horizontal and vertical stabilizers at the tail unit. In 1853, he came up with a full-size glider. Another notable figure in
gliding flight was Otto Lilienthal, who made 2,000 successful gliding flights
before dying in a gliding accident.
Powered Flight
The first controlled, powered and
heavier-than-air flight was achieved by the Wright brothers. They flew their first
aeroplane, Flayer 1 on 17 December 1903 which was equipped with a 12 hp
engine and the flight covered a distance of 37 m (120 feet) in 12 seconds.
Their second plane in 1906 managed to cover a distance of 4.45 km and the
flight lasted for more than 5 minutes. Key to their success was the slight
warping of wings that provided means of controllability to aircraft.
Jet Aircraft
Firstly, the jet engine was designed
individually in both Brittan and Germany. Though the first aircraft powered by a jet engine was German Heinkel He 178, manufactured in the late 1930s. The first
jet aircraft in service was the British Gloster Meteor. Which was further led
by the German Messerschmitt Me-262, which could fly at a maximum speed of 870 km/h.
Helicopters
The German Focke-Wulf Fw 61 was the first practical helicopter, flown in 1936 as the highlight of an indoor show in Berlin. Later, in 1939, Igor Sikorsky designed, built, and flew the experimental helicopter Vought Sikorsky VS-300 in the United States. The VS-300 was equipped with a single main rotor for lift and a smaller vertical rotor mounted on the tail to counteract torque. This rotor arrangement made Sikorsky able to achieve controllability.







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